provide for maximum contribution (both to those tools and content), and

are 100% open and transparent to provide the forkability required in Fedora

Produce a roadmap for tool production and deployment, as needed, that includes contribution from all stakeholders (note: this may be minimal if existing tools are available)

Set up an informal group to work on follow-ups

can reuse existing Docs team meeting time, or a more convenient time if needed

assign some regularly periodic progress report, as simple as article on comm-blog or elsewhere

If possible, use some meeting time for some form of hackfesting -- if not originating code, at least testing integration and determining bugs/issues or other change requests and setting up to track them over time

Impact

The completion of these goals will create the following positive change within the project:

The Fedora docs team will have better strategic direction for its docs, rather than writing whatever somebody happens to decide to write.

Fedora documentation will have more contributors from downstream projects by making reuse easier.

These outcomes connect with the following Fedora Community Objectives by creating documentation that can be reused for modular Fedora. Fedora's modularization efforts are in line with the direction of its downstream projects, and easing reuse for downstreams also makes Fedora's docs more reusable internally.

There are two notable international travelers for the FAD: Silas Hensley and Ryan Lerch. Both are critical to success at our goals and impact. Silas oversees tools and related process in Red Hat platform docs, so he can bring required experience to help guide us on where we need to align tools with internal groups; and Ryan as a designer with related experience in content/docs can ensure we are designing a workflow that meets requirements for the people who will use the tools and processes, before we get too deep into picking tools.

Detailed Work Items & Final Attendees

TBD

Diversity Statement

We are aware that the State of North Carolina has passed recent laws which are not consistent with the Fedora Project's views on equality and diversity, and may make some attendees of the FAD uncomfortable. Both Red Hat and the Fedora Project are committed to providing a discrimination-free experience for attendees. Red Hat, the host of this FAD, will provide facilities appropriately regardless of gender, sexuality, religion or race.

Regardless, if North Carolina's laws make you feel uncomfortable or unable to attend the FAD for any reason, or require changes to your travel arrangements, please contact either Josh Berkus or the Fedora Project diversity advisor, Maria Leandro with your concerns. All such contacts will be confidential.